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Press Release
February 18, 2014

Federal Reserve Board approves final rule strengthening supervision and
regulation of large U.S. bank holding companies and foreign banking
organizations
For immediate release
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The Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday approved a final rule strengthening supervision and regulation of
large U.S. bank holding companies and foreign banking organizations.
The final rule establishes a number of enhanced prudential standards for large U.S. bank holding companies
and foreign banking organizations to help increase the resiliency of their operations. These standards include
liquidity, risk management, and capital. It also requires a foreign banking organization with a significant U.S.
presence to establish an intermediate holding company over its U.S. subsidiaries, which will facilitate
consistent supervision and regulation of the U.S. operations of the foreign bank. The final rule was required
by section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
"As the financial crisis demonstrated, the sudden failure or near failure of large financial institutions can have
destabilizing effects on the financial system and harm the broader economy," Federal Reserve Chair Janet
Yellen said. "And, as the crisis also highlighted, the traditional framework for supervising and regulating major
financial institutions and assessing risks contained material weaknesses. The final rule addresses these
sources of vulnerability."
For U.S. bank holding companies with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more, the final rule
incorporates the previously issued capital planning and stress testing requirements as an enhanced
prudential standard. It also requires such a U.S. bank holding company to comply with enhanced riskmanagement and liquidity risk-management standards, conduct liquidity stress tests, and hold a buffer of
highly liquid assets based on projected funding needs during a 30-day stress event. These requirements will
help ensure that these firms can continue to lend to households and businesses even in times of financial
stress. In addition, the final rule requires publicly traded U.S. bank holding companies with total consolidated
assets of $10 billion or more to establish enterprise-wide risk committees. The new requirements for U.S.
bank holding companies complement the stress testing and resolution planning requirements for large bank
holding companies that the Board previously finalized.
The final rule will not apply to nonbank financial companies that are designated by the Financial Stability
Oversight Council for Federal Reserve supervision. Instead, the Federal Reserve Board said it will apply
enhanced prudential standards to these institutions through a subsequently issued order or rule following an
evaluation of the business model, capital structure, and risk profile of each designated nonbank financial
company. In addition, the final rule does not implement single-counterparty credit limits or early remediation
requirements for U.S. or foreign banking organizations, which will be implemented at a later date following
further study.

For foreign financial institutions, the final rule recognizes that the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations have become more complex, interconnected, and concentrated in recent years. The
requirements in the final rule will bolster the capital and liquidity positions of the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations and promote a level playing field among all banking firms operating in the United
States. Foreign banking organizations with U.S. non-branch assets of $50 billion or more will be required to
establish a U.S. intermediate holding company over their U.S. subsidiaries. The foreign-owned U.S.
intermediate holding company generally will be subject to the same risk-based and leverage capital standards
applicable to U.S. bank holding companies. The intermediate holding companies also will be subject to the
Federal Reserve's rules requiring regular capital plans and stress tests.
"The most important contribution we can make to the global financial system is to ensure the stability of the
U.S. financial system," Daniel K. Tarullo said.
Like U.S. bank holding companies with assets of $50 billion or more, a foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or more will be required to establish a U.S. risk committee and employ a
U.S. chief risk officer to help ensure that the foreign bank understands and manages the risks of its combined
U.S. operations. In addition, these foreign banking organizations will be required to meet enhanced liquidity
risk-management standards, conduct liquidity stress tests, and hold a buffer of highly liquid assets based on
projected funding needs during a 30-day stress event. Foreign banking organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more, but combined U.S. assets of less than $50 billion, are subject to enhanced
prudential standards. However, the capital, liquidity, risk-management, and stress testing requirements
applicable to these foreign banking organizations are substantially less than those applicable to foreign
banking organizations with a larger U.S. presence. In addition, the final rule implements stress testing
requirements for foreign banking organizations with total consolidated assets of more than $10 billion and risk
committee requirements for foreign banking organizations that meet the asset threshold and are publicly
traded.
The final rule for foreign banking organizations includes several adjustments in response to comments. For
example, the final rule raises the threshold for requiring a U.S. intermediate holding company from $10 billion
to $50 billion of U.S. non-branch assets and extends the initial compliance date for foreign banking
organizations to July 1, 2016, a year later than originally proposed. The final rule also generally defers
application of the leverage ratio to foreign-owned U.S. intermediate holding companies until 2018.
U.S. bank holding companies subject to the rule will need to comply by January 1, 2015.
The Federal Reserve consulted with other members of the Financial Stability Oversight Council in developing
the final rule.
For media inquiries, call 202-452-2955.
Statement by Chair Janet L. Yellen
Statement by Gov. Daniel K. Tarullo
Federal Register notice: HTML | PDF
Board Votes

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Open Board Meeting on February 18, 2014

Last Update: February 18, 2014